Opportunities
in sentence
2981 examples of Opportunities in a sentence
Additional
opportunities
for savings – to the tune of $400 billion annually – lie in more streamlined delivery of infrastructure projects.
Opportunities
to save are not limited to new capacity.
For many countries, the economic
opportunities
should be sufficient to make addressing these challenges worthwhile.
New plantations could regenerate rural areas, as new factories created
opportunities
for investors and entrepreneurs.
Opportunities
to align economic development with the reduction of greenhouse-gas emissions are rare.
This is necessary not only for the sake of the Bank itself, but, more fundamentally, for the sake of the poor in developing countries, whose access to public services and
opportunities
for a better life are undermined by weak governance and graft.
Improving governance and fighting corruption helps countries deliver basic services better and create growth and employment
opportunities
for the benefit of the poor.
The many benefits of pursuing a low-carbon development path include not only cleaner air and better energy security, but also the
opportunities
that arise from decentralized and renewable power.
These
opportunities
are particularly crucial for Africa, where more than 620 million people live without electricity.
This, in turn, would bring greater gains from trade, stronger competition, larger cross-border capital flows, lower borrowing costs, and more
opportunities
for sharing risk, all of which were expected ultimately to boost investment and productivity.
Moreover, in countries such as India and Indonesia, investment in infrastructure and transportation can reap dividends by connecting more women to productive work
opportunities.
Teenagers know that they will have fewer
opportunities
than their parents had.
Conceived as a long-overdue shift in resources and attention from wars and other urgent challenges in the Middle East toward the vast expanse of
opportunities
in the Asia-Pacific region, America’s much-vaunted strategic pivot immediately ran into a gauntlet of unintended consequences (the handmaidens of inconsistent and poorly articulated policy).
But, if we are to give all children the
opportunities
that they deserve, we are going to need a lot more of it.
Europe has made only insufficient use of its
opportunities
since 1989 – and could dramatically lose influence in the emerging power structure of the twenty-first century.
This will create considerable
opportunities
for obstruction and delay from the anti-Brexit majority there, at a time when a slowdown– a direct result of the Brexit vote – will be sapping the government’s popularity.
Even more than in Albania,
opportunities
to develop the habits of compromise that make democratic politics workable are denied to the people.
Indeed, the need to act on new export
opportunities
and remove obstacles to success is probably the central lesson from the East Asian and Irish growth miracles.
Saudi Telecom, for example, has launched STC Ventures to invest the company’s cash as well as pursue
opportunities
in cutting-edge technologies.
Rising wages in China are also creating new
opportunities
for other regional exporters.
Although investment
opportunities
in Russia abound, they are outweighed by the risks of expropriation.
The good news is that there are now
opportunities
for change, most promisingly through an international effort headed by the World Health Organization that would begin to fix the broken intellectual-property regime that is holding back the development and availability of cheap drugs.
In recent years, research has indicated that vested interests and powerful lobbies distort economic policies and cause governments to miss good
opportunities.
Here, too, New Zealand provides a helpful example, with its proactive strategy focused on bringing together the public and private sectors to identify high-value-added
opportunities
and investments in research and technology.
Despite its vast oil and gas wealth, Algeria has failed to ensure sufficient affordable water resources for its population, not to mention adequate employment
opportunities.
Instead, the MENA region has some of the world’s highest rates of youth unemployment, leading to the world’s largest brain drain, as educated young people seek
opportunities
abroad.
In fact, China turned these crises into
opportunities.
Likewise, ubiquitous social media generate new transnational groups, but also create
opportunities
for manipulation by governments and others.
The problem, then as now, is that the world’s financial markets, meant to intermediate efficiently between savings and investment opportunities, instead misallocate capital and create risk.
The US would like to have the Chinese jobs, and the Chinese would like to have better investment
opportunities.
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